Seminars and Colloquia at ESO Santiago

December 2021

16/12/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Connecting exoplanet demographics with spatially resolved observations of protoplanetary disks
Dr. Gijs Mulders (Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez)

Abstract

Exoplanets are a diverse population reflecting the range in possible outcomes of the planet formation process. Yet there are also patterns in the observed properties of planets and planetary systems that reveal common formation pathways.

In this talk I will paint a consistent picture of exoplanet demographics consisting of two different planet populations: hot super-Earths and cold Jupiters. These exoplanet populations are constrained by transit, radial velocity, direct imaging, and micro-lensing surveys. I will also draw connection between these exoplanet populations and the observed masses, sizes, and substructures of protoplanetary disks as measured with ALMA.

One puzzling observation is the high occurrence rate of super-earths around low-mass M dwarfs compared to sun-like stars. Instead a reduced planet formation efficiency would be expected based on low protoplanetary disk masses. I will show using a pebble accretion model how the growth of cold Jupiters can affect the growth of hot super-earths, and explain this unexpected trend with stellar mass.

 

15/12/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Brown dwarfs and their planetary systems
Mariana Sanchez (ESO)

Abstract

Brown dwarfs are, together with very low mass stars,  the most abundant objects in the solar neighborhood.  However, their formation scenario as well as the formation of planetary systems they host are still under debate. On the one hand, I will present the results obtained when studying pre-brown dwarfs candidates in Barnard-30 cloud by using ALMA data.  On the other hand, I will describe the treatment of planet formation at the sub-stellar mass limit during the first hundred of Myr by using a N-body code. This model includes tidal and general relativistic effects, spin-up and contraction of the central object, as well as gas-disk interactions during the first few Myr, which are crucial to describe the resulting planetary architectures, in particular the close-in planet population located into the habitable zone. Finally, I will compare the resulting simulated planetary systems with the observed exoplanet population around low mass objects

 

09/12/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ESO/JAO Colloquium
Talk — The Growth of Supermassive Black Holes in the Early Universe
Anna-Christina Eilers (MIT)

Abstract

The existence of luminous quasars hosting supermassive black holes within the first billion years of cosmic history challenges our understanding of black hole growth. An important piece of the puzzle is the lifetime of quasars - the time that galaxies shine as active quasars and during which the bulk of the black hole growth occurs - but to date its value remains uncertain by several orders of magnitude. I will present a new method to obtain constraints on the lifetime of quasars based on the sizes of ionized regions around quasars known as proximity zones. These proximity zones act as a "quasar clock" and enable us to study the co-evolution of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies from a new perspective. Surprisingly, our results indicate that black holes might be able to grow several orders of magnitude faster than previously thought. I will further show how future observations with the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope will enable new insights into the early assembly of supermassive black holes and galaxy-quasar co-evolution across cosmic time. 

 

01/12/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Is Julia a language for astronomers? A case-study to extract stellar clusters from Gaia data.
Stephane Leon (JAO)

Abstract

Stellar clusters are widely spread through the Galaxy and are a common location of the newborn stars.  Together with  the stellar evolution and the inner dynamics of a stellar cluster the main drivers of their evolution are the interactions with the Galaxy  gravitational field  tidal shocks with various components, stripping, dynamical friction, etc. With the observations of the satellite Gaia it is now possible to have a  complete knowledge of the structure/dynamics of the stellar clusters with great accuracy.  First of all we can select with high confidence the star members of a cluster.
 
We started a project to select the stars in a sample of  1500 known open clusters using the Gaia DR2. The method relies on the DBSCAN algorithm to extract the stars  within a 8-fold parameter space by optimizing the clustering parameters using a Bayesian approach. The development was started in Python but switched successfully to the Julia language for various reasons (speed, data structure, etc). The program and the documentation are accessible on the Github repository https://github.com/bosscha/gaia-shock  

 

10:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — GOODS-ALMA 2.0: Understanding the role of compact star formation in galaxy evolution
Dr. Carlos Gómez-Guijarro (CEA, Saclay)

Abstract

Compact star formation appears to be generally common in dusty star-forming galaxies. However, it remains to be understood how systematic compactness is and its role in the framework set by the scaling relations in galaxy evolution. GOODS-ALMA is a 1.1mm galaxy survey over a continuous area of 72 arcmin^2 at a homogeneous sensitivity with two array configurations aimed at understanding these questions. In this new version 2.0 we present a new low-resolution dataset and its combination with the previous high-resolution dataset. The latest results reveal that dust continuum emission at 1.1mm prevails, and sizes as extended as typical star-forming stellar disks are rare. A population of galaxies with modest star formation rates, but which exhibit extremely compact star formation with starburst-like depletion timescales, unveils. Compact star formation appears as a physical driver of depletion timescales, gas fractions, and dust temperatures. The new findings suggest that the star formation rate is sustained in very massive SFGs, even when their gas fractions are low, and they are presumably on the way to quiescence. Gas and star formation compression seems to be a mechanism that allows to hold their star formation rate.

November 2021

18/11/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — The dust properties of low-metallicity galaxies at cosmic noon
Dr. Gergo Popping

Abstract

At the peak epoch of cosmic star formation activity, z∼ 2, the obscured star-formation rate (SFR) density traced by the IR luminosity is 4 to 8 times higher than the unobscured SFR density traced by the UV luminosity. This observation demonstrates that dust is ubiquitous in the interstellar medium (ISM) of high-redshift galaxies and must play a key role in galaxy physics. However, studying dust at high redshifts has been challenging due to limits in instrumentation, and our current knowledge is primarily restricted to exceptionally massive and luminous objects. Although there are measurements of dust and gas at low redshifts, the differences in the ISM conditions in high-redshift galaxies compared to those in the local universe, such as higher gas fractions and SFR surface densities, underscore the importance of studying the properties of ISM dust at high redshifts. A key galaxy property closely tied to the build-up of dust in galaxies is metallicity. For example, the relation between the dust-to-gas ratio of galaxies and their metallicity provides key constraints for the physics and timescales governing the buildup and destruction of dust in galaxies. Unfortunately, samples of galaxies at z~2 for which metalliciy and dust-continuum information is available are limited.

To remedy this, we used ALMA to observe the 870 micron emission of 27 redshift two main-sequence galaxies for which metallicity information is available from the MOSFIRE Deep Evolution Field survey (MOSDEF). I will present the results of this effort, specifically focusing on how the shape of the dust-continuum spectral energy distribution (SED) of galaxies at z~2 changes as a function of various galaxy properties, what this implies for the properties of the dust in these galaxies, and draw conclusions on the relative amount of obscured star-formation in main-sequence galaxies as a function of their metallicity. I will then present the dust masses we can infer from the z~2 galaxies, how they compare to their stellar masses and the relation we obtain between the dust-to-gas ratio of galaxies and their metalliciy. These results will all be placed in the context of redshift zero observations to constrain the evolution of the dust properties of galaxies and in the context of theoretical model predictions. I will finish by discussing what future observations and technology will be necessary to push the study of dust and dust-obscured star-formation in low-metallicity galaxies at cosmic noon forward.

11/11/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ESO/JAO Colloquium
Talk — The dwarf galaxies' view of heavy elements (s-, i-, and r-processes)
Asa Skuladottir (The University of Florence)

Abstract

The Milky Way has dozens of dwarf galaxy satellites, which each have their own unique star formation and chemical enrichment histories. These systems contain a wealth of information, in particular about early chemical enrichment and different nucleosynthetic channels. In this talk I will focus on what dwarf galaxies can teach us about neutron star mergers, and other production sites of heavy elements, i.e. the s-, i-, and r-processes.
10/11/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Characterizing the built-up of extended halos with planetary nebulae: clues from integral-field spectroscopy
Ana Inés Ennis (ESO/The La Plata National University)

Abstract

 

 In this talk, I present a summary and some preliminary results of the work I carried out during my ESO studentship under the supervision of Dr. Fuyan Bian and Dr. Johanna Hartke. I introduce the method we developed to detect and analyse planetary nebulae (PNe) in the inner regions of galaxies, using integral-field spectroscopy to decompose the stellar and nebular contributions in these bright regions. Finally, I show a first view of the PN population of our pilot galaxy, NGC 1387. This is part of an ongoing project to systematically quantify the variation of the PNLF and to trace it from the innermost regions of galaxies to several effective radii, thus painting a holistic picture of the stellar populations traced by the PNe that build the extended halos of early-type galaxies.

03/11/21 (Wednesday)
10:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Radio Lobes dynamics of the nearby galaxy NGC4472
Siddhant Pinjarkar

Abstract

I will be presenting a discussion on the elliptical galaxy NGC4472 which shows a clear signature of AGN feedback mechanism. The radio galaxy is the dominant member to a nearby galaxy group that is falling into the Virgo cluster. NGC4472 is one of the closest radio galaxies with a feedback mechanism (z=0.003272). During my ESO internship, I worked on new data from the VLA  to image the galaxy in the L band (1.2 GHz) and the P band (350 MHz). I will talk about the AGN feedback mechanism and what it means for a galaxy. Furthermore, the talk will include the data reduction process followed by the VLA observations and the images produced after the reduction. As we detect more extended emission we can compare with previous radio observations, we compare our results with the existing radio and X-ray maps of the NGC4472 to analyse our findings.

October 2021

21/10/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Studying the nature of dark lenses in the Galaxy with the Gaia space mission
Lukasz Wyrzykowski (University of Warsaw)

Abstract

Finding a lonely black hole in the Milky Way is not an easy task as the black holes are pitch black. One of the promising methods is gravitational microlensing, in which a background source gets brighter temporarily due to its light being bent and magnified by a foreground object. Gaia space mission provides unique data which can be used for discovering black holes thanks to its all-sky monitoring and superb-accuracy time-series astrometric measurements. However, in order to efficiently use Gaia data, long-term monitoring and follow-up of candidate microlensing events are necessary. I will describe the products of Gaia Science Alerts and our programme of coordinated time-domain observations of candidates for lensing events, including long-term photometry collected by a global network of robotic and manual telescopes, as well as spectroscopic and astrometric follow-up using the largest telescopes in the world. I will also describe the forthcoming results to be part of Gaia Data Release 3, containing candidates for microlensing events due to black holes. 
 
14/10/21 (Thursday)
10:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Constraining the dust-obscured star formation activity up to z~7
Jorge Zavala (East-Asia ALMA Regional Center)

Abstract

The majority of the star formation activity in the Universe during the past 10-11Gyr, back to z~2.5, is primarily enshrouded by dust. However, although the history of cosmic star-formation has been thoroughly mapped at UV/optical wavelengths out to z~11, FIR/submm surveys have not kept apace. Consequently, the total amount of star formation that is absorbed and re-emitted by dust at high redshifts remains highly uncertain. During this talk, I will introduce the Mapping Obscuration to Reionization ALMA (MORA) Survey, the first interferometric blind map at 2mm with a total area of ~180 sq. arcmin. By combining our new 2mm number counts with the state-of-the-art galaxy number counts at other wavelengths, we place constraints on the evolution of the IRLF and dust-obscured star formation up to z~7. Does dust-obscured star formation still dominate during the early Universe? Our best answer to this question will be presented.

07/10/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Disks around evolved binaries: do they form second-generation planets?
Jacques Kluska (KU Leuven)

Abstract

Most of the planets were formed around young stars. But can they form around evolved stars as well? The origin of the diversity and complexity of the detected exoplanetary systems stems from how they form in protoplanetary disks. These disks are intensively studied around young stars thanks to the high-angular resolution provided by recent instruments (VLT, ALMA). However, similar disks are also found around evolved stars, namely post-AGB binaries, raising the exciting but yet unanswered question of second-generation planet formation. While this question has only been tackled theoretically in the past, we have now the possibility to probe such second-generation planet formation by observations using high angular resolution instruments. In this talk I will show the latest results of an extensive high angular resolution observing campaign of these disks using infrared interferometry at the VLTI (PIONIER, GRAVITY, MATISSE).  I will show that these disks share many similarities with protoplanetary disks around young stars.  These disks are, therefore, a unique laboratory to test planet formation scenarios in a parameter space that is unmet around young stars (e.g., short disk lifetime, high stellar luminosity, no influence from the environment). Whether or not planet formation is possible at the end of stellar evolution, studying it in a very different parameter space will provide an unprecedented test to current planet formation theories. 

September 2021

30/09/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Massive overcontact binaries: A fork in the road of massive star evolution
Michael Abdul-Masih (ESO)

Abstract

Nearly a quarter of all massive stars will merge with a companion during their lifetimes.  This coalescence is preceded by a contact phase, which, while expected to be common, is poorly understood.  This is due to a lack of observational constraints: less than ten O-type overcontact binaries are currently known.  Recent theoretical studies have postulated that these massive overcontact binaries could be progenitors of several exotic classes of objects including magnetic massive stars, Be/Oe stars, LBVs and gravitational wave events.  In this talk, I will discuss the current state of the field of massive overcontact binary research, with a specific focus on the chemically homogeneous evolution pathway.  I will discuss the theoretical predictions as well as what the observational data tells us, and how these compare and contrast with one another.  I will also describe a new spectroscopic analysis technique specifically designed to analyze these highly deformed systems and I will discuss how accounting for the 3D geometry can change our understanding of these objects.

 
16/09/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — A tail of two kitties
Carter Rhea (Université de Montréal)

Abstract

Machine learning is rapidly becoming another tool in an astronomer’s statistical toolbox. In this talk, I will discuss a common paradigms in machine learning -- supervised learning -- through the lense of a popular algorithm: a Convolution Neural Network. We will then explore the applicability of this algorithm (and its cousin -- the artificial neural network) to the SIGNALS program spearheaded by Laurie Rousseau-Nepton at the CFHT using the new iFTS instrument SITELLE. Applying the technique to a dynamic region of M33 reveals the strengths (and weaknesses!) of such an approach. We discuss the three papers in our series exploring this topic as well as our new software for IFU data cube analysis that natively incorporates these techniques into analysis protocols.

15/09/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — i-band light curves of SNIa: looking at the details
Priscilla Pessi (ESO)

Abstract

Type Ia supernovae (SNe) have been proven of great use for cosmological studies. In optical bands, they are "standardizable" candles as their light curve shape and colors correlate with their peak luminosity. Finding parameters independent of the light curve shape could aid to improve existing calibrations. 
There are independent studies that show that longer wavelengths indeed provide independent information. In particular, SNe Ia i-band light curves are more complex than those seen in B and V bands, with most showing a secondary maximum. I will present the results of close inspection of a subtle feature sandwiched between the two maxima.
 
 
09/09/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — AGN feedback in galaxies across cosmic time
Darshan Kakkad (ESO)

Abstract

Black holes in the centre of most massive galaxies are believed to regulate their gas content and star formation via active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback. But in reality, is the AGN feedback indeed powerful enough to remove gas supply and eventually quench star formation in the majority of these massive galaxies? Or have we been limited by studies biased towards high luminosity AGN and/or low spatial resolution observations and over-estimated the impact that the AGN may have? I will present results from optical (MUSE) and near-infared (SINFONI) Integral Field Spectroscopic (IFS) observations of a large sample of low redshift (z~0.1) and high redshift (z~2) X-ray selected AGN host galaxies. These observations trace ionised outflows using the rest frame [OIII]5007 emission line. High spatial resolution and deep observations has allowed us to derive spatially resolved mass outflow rate maps for the first time in such a large sample of galaxies. I will show that these mass outflow rate maps have significantly reduced the systematic uncertainty in the derivation of mass loading factors and coupling efficiency between the outflow and the interstellar medium, previously not possible with integrated spectra. Furthermore, the results reveal the existence of correlations between the outflow properties and the AGN luminosity for both the low and high redshift sample. However, these outflow correlations are weaker or non-existent with the Eddington ratio, suggesting the possible role of radio jets on these outflows. These results question the conventional dichotomy between the radiation and the mechanical mode of feedback in AGN host galaxies. Furthermore, the observed outflowing gas is unlikely to escape the gravitation potential of the host galaxies. I will discuss the implications of these results in the context of current galaxy formation models. 

August 2021

26/08/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — The Great Dimming of the red supergiant Betelgeuse 2019-2020 seen from Paranal
Miguel Montagès (LESIA, Observatoire de Paris - PSL)

Abstract

During winter 2019-2020, the nearby red supergiant star Betelgeuse (alpha Ori) experienced an unprecedented drop in brightness, reaching its historic magnitude maximum of V~1.6 during February 2020. I will present the outcome of our VLT/VLTI campaign that spatially resolved the star at the time of the Great Dimming. This event, visible to the unaided eye, caused a media frenzy but it also allowed us to better understand the mass-loss process of red supergiants. The rate of this outflow has a crucial impact on the fate of the star: it defines its final mass - hence the mass of the compact object that will remain after the supernova - and also the nature of supernova progenitor. During the Great Dimming, we may have directly witnessed an enhanced mass ejection in the environment of Betelgeuse.

25/08/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Hidden in the haystack: low-luminosity globular clusters towards the Milky Way bulge
Felipe Gran (ESO)

Abstract

Recent wide-area surveys have enabled us to study the Milky Way with unprecedented detail. 
Its inner regions, hidden behind dust and gas, have been partially unveiled with the arrival of near-IR photometric and spectroscopic datasets. 
There is a population of low-mass globular clusters among recent discoveries, known to be missing, especially towards the Galactic bulge. 
In this talk based on the Studentship work, new low-luminosity globular clusters located towards the bulge area will be presented and characterised using Gaia EDR3 proper motions, VVV near-IR images and MUSE observations. Structural parameters were derived, and when available, metallicities, radial velocities and orbital properties were determined. 
Implications for the existence of these clusters will be briefly discussed, while highlighting the importance of the stellar proper motions to detect these clusters, with distances up to 20 kpc behind the Galactic bulge.

 

05/08/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — AO predictions vs Machine Learning: Battle one!
Zahed Wahhaj (ESO)

July 2021

29/07/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Probing the circumstellar structures of massive forming stars at high-angular resolution
Abigail Frost (KU Leuven)

Abstract

Protostellar disks play key roles in the accretion process and formation of planetesimals for low-mass stars, forming various substructures as different physical processes occur within them. Massive stars (M>8Msun) form from the same clouds of dust and gas as low-mass stars but are much more influential. They shape star forming environments through their outflows, enrich the interstellar medium after synthesising heavy elements and contribute to galactic-wide processes. Despite their importance, the formation of massive protostellar disks is poorly understood, as they are deeply embedded, distant and rare, which introduces more observational challenges. In my talk, I will discuss how infrared observations are helping us to understand the innermost regions of the most massive forming stars. I will present some of my recent results where fitting 3D radiative transfer models to N-band interferometric data, Q-band imaging data and spectral energy distributions simultaneously allowed me to obtain the multi-scale characteristics of a sample of massive YSOs. I’ll describe how the multi-scale approach allows us to distinguish disk emission from other dusty areas of the protostellar environment and subsequently to search for disc substructure and investigate evolution. Finally, I will discuss how the presence of these features has significance for star formation as a whole and how new and future VLTI instrumentation (such as MATISSE and GRAVITY+) can help improve in our picture of the formation of massive stars. 

 

27/07/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
James Dawson (Cardiff University)

Abstract

In the upcoming decades large facilities, such as the SKA, will provide resolved observations of the kinematics of millions of galaxies. In order to assist in the timely exploitation of these vast datasets we have explored the use of self-supervised, physics aware neural networks capable of Bayesian kinematic modelling of galaxies. In this talk I will present the network's ability to model the kinematics of cold gas in galaxies with an emphasis on recovering physical parameters and accompanying modelling errors. The models discussed are able to recover rotation curves, inclinations and disc scale lengths for both CO and HI data which match well with those estimated in the literature. The models are also able to provide modelling errors over learned parameters thanks to the application of quasi-Bayesian Monte-Carlo dropout. This work shows the promising use of machine learning and, in particular, self-supervised neural networks in the context of kinematically modelling galaxies observed using interferomers such as ALMA and VLA as well as IFU instruments like SDSS (MaNGA).

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Talk — High-z Lyman Break Galaxies with JWST: parallel observations of dwarf satellites
Viola Gelli (University of Florence)

Abstract

Dwarf galaxies are the most common type of galaxies in the Universe at all epochs and they play a fundamental role in cosmic history, being responsible for the build up of massive galaxies and possibly driving the reionization and metal enrichment processes. High-redshift observations of such sources are not available yet, but we demonstrate that the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), while targeting massive Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs), will catch for the first time the light of the faint satellite dwarf galaxies orbiting around them.We use state-of-art cosmological simulations of a typical LBG at z=6 to uncover the properties of satellite galaxies and make predictions for the upcoming JWST observations. These dwarf galaxies cover a wide range of stellar masses (log(M⋆/M⊙)≃7−9). We find that, even in such extremely dense environments, internal supernovae feedback is the key mechanism regulatingtheir evolution, capable of completely quenching dwarf galaxies. Only the frequent merger events characterising these biased regions can effectively prolong the star-formation in the most massive satellites.Modelling the galaxies’ stellar emission we reconstruct their spectral energy distributions: these reveal how with the JWST/NIRCam instrument, through colour-magnitude diagrams, it will be possible to infer properties such as the galaxies’ stellar masses and ages. The instrument’s high resolution will allow us to spatially resolve these small systems from the nearby host. Thanks to JWST’s high sensitivities we will detect, for the very first time, faint satellite dwarf galaxies of high-z LBGs in less than 5 hours.

21/07/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — The tidal stability of Fornax cluster dwarf galaxies in Newtonian and Milgromian dynamics.
Elena Asencio (Bonn University)

Abstract

Dwarf galaxies are characterised by their small size, low mass and low surface brightness. This makes them ideal for studying the effects of gravitational interactions on galaxies, as their structure is more susceptible to be affected by tidal forces than that of larger galaxies. In turn, this also makes them very useful for comparing and testing different gravity models, since the expected degree of disturbance in the dwarf structure is highly reliant on the gravity law assumed and on the model-dependent properties of the dwarf (e.g: dark matter halo). In this project we use the recent Fornax Deep Survey Dwarf galaxy Catalog (FDSDC) to compare the observed properties of the dwarf galaxies in the Fornax cluster with their predicted properties by the standard model of cosmology (LCDM) and Milgromian dynamics (MOND). Assuming that a dwarf will be disturbed if its half mass radius is of the same order as its tidal radius, we proceed by calculating the ratio of these two radii (tidal susceptibility) for the dwarfs in the FDSDC catalog - both in LCDM and MOND - and comparing it with their observed morphological classification (disturbed/undisturbed). From this quick test, we can already intuit that the predicted values of LCDM for the tidal susceptibility value of disturbance are significantly lower than expected. Next, we construct a forward model of the system - this is, a test mass simulation of the orbits of the Fornax dwarfs - and, using the MCMC method, we fit it to the real Fornax system with the observed parameters: projected position, distribution of tidal susceptibility and fraction of disturbed dwarfs. This allows us to have a better constraint on the tidal susceptibility value at which a dwarf galaxy starts to look disturbed and the tidal susceptibility value at which it gets destroyed, according to LCDM and MOND. Finally, we perform an N-body simulation of a Fornax dwarf in MOND using the Phantom of Ramses (PoR) code to check the actual tidal susceptibility value at which a dwarf galaxy should be destroyed in this model. Our results show that, in MOND, the dwarf stability limit inferred from observations (by MCMC) is in agreement with that inferred from N-body simulations. While, for LCDM, the dwarf stability limit inferred from observations is significantly lower than that predicted by the LCDM N-body simulations of dwarf galaxies performed in the last years.

20/07/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Sophie Beaumont (IRAP & NASA GSFC)

Abstract

The investigation of the physical hot and energetic phenomena in the Universe will further improve our understanding of the assembly of the largest structures and massive halos of galaxies, and of the role of black holes in shaping the Universe as we see it. Spatially resolved X-ray high-resolution spectroscopy will be a crucial tool to achieve these scientific goals. The X-IFUinstrument onboard the Athena observatory will provide us with these capabilities through the use of arrays of Transition edge microcalorimeters detectors. These superconducting devices will deliver the required exquisite spectral resolution needed to achieve the core science objectives, such as the characterization of turbulence and bulk motions in the hot gaseous atmospheres of groups and clusters of galaxies in order to unveil the process of large scale structures assembly. I will present the TransitionEdge Sensors principle, the status of the instrumental development for the X-IFU instrument, and discuss their performance in view of the scientific objectives of the Athena mission. I will further present the case of a feasibility study and optimisation of the observing strategy for the characterization of the internal dynamics of the intra-cluster medium, through the use of mock simulations of observations with the X-IFU instrument.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Oliver Herbort (St Andrews Centre for Exoplanet Science)

Abstract

One of the fundamental questions for planetary science is how surfaces of other planets similar to the rocky bodies in our solar system look like. What is the rock structure like? Will there be water? Are there any active atmospheric cycles? How can we detect these different conditions?The current space missions and ground based instruments allow the detection of specific gasspecies and some cloud compositions in atmospheres of giant exoplanets. With instruments  installed in the near future and space crafts currently being build or planned, these kind of observations will be available for planets with smaller sizes and an overall rocky composition. We aim to further understand the connection of the conditions of the upper atmosphere with the conditions on the crust of the planet (temperature, pressure, composition).Our equilibrium chemistry models allow us to investigate theexpected crust and near-crust-atmosphere composition based. With this, we investigate the conditions under which liquid water is actually stable at the surface of a planet and not incorporated in hydrated rocks. Based on this crust -near-crust-atmosphereinteraction we build an atmospheric model, which allows us to investigate what kind of clouds are stable and could be present in atmospheres of rocky exoplanets. This allows us to link the high altitude gas phase and cloud compositions to the surface conditions.

13/07/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Antonio Pensabene (INAF-Astrophysics and Space Science Observatory of Bologna)

Abstract

The host galaxies of z>6 quasars are ideal laboratories to investigate the interplay between the accreting black hole and star formation and to characterize the interstellar medium (ISM) at cosmic dawn. The unprecedented capabilities of ALMA and NOEMA have opened a new window to study the galaxy evolution at early epochs at (sub-)mm wavelengths. By surveying multiple ISM tracers, we can probe the different phases of the star-forming medium and put first quantitative constraints on their physical properties for which there is little information at such high redshifts. In this talk I will present an ALMA multi-line survey of two z>6 quasar host galaxies and their nearby serendipitous-discovered companions. These are among the most star-forming galaxies known to date at these redshifts that do not show evidence of AGN activity. By measuring the emission of various gas tracers (OH163𝜇m, H2O, mid-/high-J CO, [CI]369𝜇m, [CII]158𝜇m, [NII]205𝜇m), we study the impact of the luminous accreting black hole and intense star formation on the ISM of the quasar hosts and their companions. In addition, by combining continuum emission in different frequency bands we place constraints on the dust properties. In this talk, I will show the power of multi-line studies of far-infrared diagnostics in order to dissect the physical conditions in the first massive galaxies as they emerge at the end of the Epoch of Reionization. This study lays the foundation for a follow-up campaign using NOEMA aiming to probe the warm dense phase of the ISM at z>6.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Maria Jose Rain (University of Padova)

Abstract

Blue straggler stars (BSS) were originally identified in the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of the globular cluster M3, where they defined an extension of the cluster main sequence, blueward and above the turnoff (TO). Among the variety of objects that populate stellar clusters, BSS  are surely between those still presenting many puzzles to astronomers since they are considered crucial probes for the study of the complex interaction between stellar evolution and stellar dynamics. Further, their presence poses a challenge for the standard single-star evolution theory, since stars with masses higher than that of the cluster TO  should have evolved into the white dwarf regime long ago and, besides, the major formation scenarios for  BSS involve stellar interactions. At present, these exotic stars have been largely identified in different stellar systems, such as globular clusters (GCs), dwarf galaxies, open clusters (OCs), and even in the field populations of the Milky Way. In particular,  available catalogs of  BSS in OCs are purely based on photometric criteria,  namely only the location of a given star in the CMD dictates its BS nature. Nevertheless, systematic investigations of the properties of galactic OCs are hampered by the inhomogeneity of the data available by the date of the catalogs were published, and consequently, the  BSS reported in this catalog are mostly of uncertain membership. Thus, while useful, these compilations are not reliable enough to allow the derivation of statistical properties of BSS.The principal aim of this thesis was to create a catalog of BSs in OCs based on the astrometric solutions of Gaia DR2 and not only on photometric criteria. In addition, we have searched also for possible yellow stragglers stars (YSS) i.e possible evolved BSS.  Finally, we have complement Gaia DR2 data with multi-epoch spectroscopic data from FLAMES, which allowed us to have a closer look at the BS population in four OCs with very different properties: age, metallicity, mass, and location in the MW disk.

08/07/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — What can Barium stars tell us about binarity and nucleosynthesis in AGB stars?
Ana Escorza (ESO)

Abstract

A rich zoo of peculiar objects forms when stars with extended and loosely bound convective envelopes, such as Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars, undergo gravitational interaction with a binary companion. The stellar, chemical and orbital properties of these peculiar products of binary interactions are essential to understand the interaction history in such systems in addition to many physical mechanisms that concern their giant progenitors.

In the past years, we have obtained new important observational constraints for a family of chemically peculiar stars known as Barium (Ba) stars. These main-sequence and red-giant stars formed when a former AGB companion, which is now a dim white dwarf (WD), polluted them with material enriched with s-process elements. The orbital properties of Ba stars can help to constrain the mass-transfer mechanism through which they formed, and their chemical abundances are a tracer of the nucleosynthesis processes that took place inside the former AGB companion.

During my talk, I will present the results of several long-term radial-velocity monitoring programmes and an accurate HR diagram of Ba and related stars built thanks to high-quality Gaia distances. Combining these results with astrometric information, we could also determine absolute masses for some undetectable WD companions of Ba stars, obtaining direct information about their AGB progenitors via initial-final mass relationships. I will discuss the orbital parameters of Ba star systems in the context of binary interactions in systems with AGB-star components and the WD masses in the context of AGB nucleosynthesis. Neither binary evolution models nor nucleosynthesis models fully reproduce the orbital and chemical properties of Ba stars. These problems evidence an important gap in our knowledge about AGB stars, their interactions with their binary companions, and the progeny of these systems.

 

 


07/07/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Are the peculiar dust properties along sightlines toward Type Ia Supernovae caused by circumstellar or interstellar matter?
Aleksandar Cikota (ESO)

Abstract

Highly reddened Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) display low total-to-selective extinction ratios, RV < 2, in comparison to that of typical Milky Way dust (RV ~ 3.3), and polarization curves that rise steeply to blue wavelengths with peak polarization values at short wavelengths lmax < 0.4 mm, in comparison to the typical galactic values oflmax ~ 0.55 mm. Understanding the source of these properties could provide insight into the progenitor systems of these SNe. We aim to determine whether they are the result of the host galaxy's interstellar dust or circumstellar dust. This is accomplished by analyzing the continuum polarization of 104 SNe Ia in both dust-rich spiral and dust-poor elliptical galaxies as a function of normalized galactocentric distance. We find that there is a general trend of SNe Ia in spiral galaxies displaying increased polarization values when located closer to the host galaxies' center, while SNe Ia in elliptical host galaxies display low polarization. Furthermore, the highly polarized SNe Ia in spiral host galaxies display polarization curves rising toward blue wavelengths, while no evidence of such polarization properties is shown in elliptical host galaxies. This indicates that the source of the peculiar polarization curves is likely the result of interstellar as opposed to circumstellar material. The peculiar polarization and extinction properties observed toward some SNe Ia may be explained by the radiative torque disruption mechanism induced by the SN or the interstellar radiation field.

 

06/07/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Logan Francis (University of Victoria)

Abstract

Transition disks with large inner dust cavities are thought to host massive companions. However, the disk structure inside the companion orbit and how material flows toward an actively accreting star remain unclear. We present a high-resolution continuum study of inner disks in the cavities of 38 transition disks. Measurements of the dust mass from archival Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array observations are combined with stellar properties and spectral energy distributions to assemble a detailed picture of the inner disk. An inner dust disk is detected in 18 of 38 disks in our sample. Of the 14 resolved disks, 8 are significantly misaligned with the outer disk. The near-infrared excess is uncorrelated with the mm-dust mass of the inner disk. The size–luminosity correlation known for protoplanetary disks is recovered for the inner disks as well, consistent with radial drift. The inner disks are depleted in dust relative to the outer disk, and their dust mass is uncorrelated with the accretion rates. This is interpreted as the result of radial drift and trapping by planets in a low α (∼10−3) disk, or a failure of the α-disk model to describe angular momentum transport and accretion. The only disk in our sample with confirmed planets in the gap, PDS 70, has an inner disk with a significantly larger radius and lower inferred gas-to-dust ratio than other disks in the sample. We hypothesize that these inner disk properties and the detection of planets are due to the gap having only been opened recently by young, actively accreting planets

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Alice Minelli (DIFA - UNIBO (Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia - Universitá di Bologna))

Abstract

The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) is an excellent laboratory to investigate the chemical enrichment history of a galaxy that has experienced strong gravitational interactions with other systems, since it is in an early stage of a minor merger event with theLarge Magellanic Cloud. Despite its proximity (~60 kpc) and the possibility to resolve its stellar content, the chemical composition of the SMC is still poorly known. In order to fill this gap and the accurately reconstruct the chemical evolution of the stellar populations in the SMC, we analysed FLAMES@VLT high-resolution spectra of about 200 red giant stars belonging to the SMC field. Additionally, we analysed stars members of three SMC clusters with different ages (~11, ~6 and ~1 Gyr) covering the entire range of ages of the SMC clusters system. This dataset allows to reconstruct the role played by the different contributors to the chemical enrichment, i.e. Type II and Ia supernovae, hypernovae, AGB stars.

In particular, most of the stars (both in fieldand clusters) have solar-scaled [alfa/Fe] ratios, indicating that they formed from a gas already polluted by Supernovae Type Ia. Among the field stars we identified a bunch of rare SMC metal-poor stars ([Fe/H]<-2.0) that allow to study for the first time the early chemical enrichment of the galaxy. Finally, we found the evidence of the presence of a metallicity gradient within the SMC, with metallicity decreasing moving outward

 

June 2021

30/06/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — SPHERE performance for faint targets
Matias Jones (ESO, Chile)

Abstract

High contrast imaging is a powerful technique to detect and characterize planetary companions at large orbital separationsfrom their parent stars. SPHERE at the VLT is one of the most powerful instruments for high contrast imaging, and has proven to be very efficient in the detection and characterization of substellar companions and protoplanetary disks. Although the instrumental performance is well characterized for relatively bright stars, still we have a restricted knowledge of the SPHERE xAO performance for faint stars, and thus the instrument limiting magnitude. 
In this talk I will present the main results of a detailed analysis the SPHERE AO performance for stars fainter than G ~ 11.0 mag. For this we have analyzed more than 100 stars observed since 2015. We have derived raw contrast curves as a function of the stellar magnitude. Similarly, we have studied the FWHM of the PSF as a function of the stellar magnitude. We found a sharp decrease in the performance for stars fainter than G ~ 12.5 mag, even when observed under excellent atmospheric condition. This is explained by the lack of flux in the visible wavefront sensor.

 

22/06/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Jose Eduardo Mendez-Delgado (Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias)

Abstract

We analyze the physical conditions (density and temperature), chemical abundances, dynamics and kinematics of gas in HH529II, HH529III and HH204, photoionized Herbig-Haro objects in the Orion Nebula. By using very high resolution spectroscopy obtained withUVES@VLT, we separate the Doppler-shifted emission of the velocity outflows from the main nebular emission, studying each object independently. To study the 3D dynamics and kinematics we complement our spectroscopic study with 20 years of archival of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging. In all cases, we were able to determine the physical conditions through several diagnostics. We analyze the chemical composition by using both recombination lines (RLs) and collisional excitation lines (CELs). We studyone of the most important problems in the photoionized nebulae: the discrepancy between abundances based on CELs and RLs. In HH204 we did not observe such discrepancy, while in HH529II and HH529III we did. Despite of the different physical conditions and ionization degrees, the chemical composition of HH204, HH529II and HH529III, based on CELs is consistent, presenting abundances of metals around 0.1 dex greater than those derived in the Orion Nebula. We also found direct evidence of destruction of dust inthe shock fronts, releasing elements such as Fe, Ni and Cr in the gas phase, increasing their abundances in these objects by several times the content of the Orion Nebula. Through the radial and tangential motions, we explored the dynamics and kinematics of each outflow, concluding that HH529II is an internal working surface of the HH529 flow.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Nikki Arendse (DARK Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen)

Abstract

Persistent tension between low-redshift observations and the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (CMB) suggests residual systematics or new physics beyond the standard LCDM model. In this talk, I will show results obtained from local observations of supernovae and baryon acoustic oscillations combined with low-redshift distance calibrators, that provide constraints on the Hubble constant and the sound horizon in a cosmologically independent way. When these values are compared to constraints from the CMB, a tension up to 5 sigma arises. Several modifications of LCDM have been put forward to reconcile the tension, but how well do these models actually perform? I will talk about the current status of tensions between the CMB-based and local (based on gravitational time delays and classical distance ladder) distance calibrations. I will also critically review most popular extensions of LCDM proposedto reconcile these measurements.

For more details about this work: https://arxiv.org/abs/1909.07986

 

17/06/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — ALMA Large program highlight talks: A cloud-scale view of the star formation process from PHANGS
Professor Eva Schinnerer (MPIA, Germany)

Abstract

Where do stars form and how is their formation regulated across galactic disks are two critical questions for our understanding of the star formation process. High angular observations of nearby galaxies allow us to sample the star formation process across entire galactic disks reaching now regularly the scales of the star-forming units, namely Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs) and HII regions. Such data provide new insights on the molecular gas reservoir and its role in the star formation process as well as information on the importance of galactic components such as bulges, stellar bars, spiral arms and active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the conversion of cold (molecular) gas into stars. I will introduce the PHANGS (Physics at High Angular resolution in Nearby GalaxieS) survey and present a few highlights from the ongoing research of the collaboration pertaining to the molecular gas—star formation cycle.

15/06/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Joaquin Garcia de la Cruz (Liverpool John Moores University)

Abstract

The merger history of a galaxy has a direct impact on the structure of its geometrically defined thick disc. Among other effects, mergers induce flaring in the stellar populations in the disc, which can be reflected on the thick disc’s age structure. As weare studying the age structure of thick discs in the MW and nearby galaxies with an unprecedented level of detail, it is important to use simulations in order to have a more comprehensible picture of the diversity of thick disc age structures, and their connection to the galaxies' merger histories.

In this talk, I will present the results of an analysis performed on a sample of 27 simulated MW mass galaxies in their cosmological context, where we explore the connection between the flaring of mono-age populations (MAPs), thick disc flaring, thin/thick disc separation, and thick disc’s age structure. I will explain under which conditions MAPs create flat thick discs, and how these galaxies form a continuum thin/thick structure, have radial age gradients, and tend to have quiescent recent merger histories, similar to our understanding of the Galaxy. Conversely, I will show the different scenarios we find where MAPs can create flared thick discs, with these galaxies showing a wider variety of the aforementioned features.

In conclusion, the results presented in this talk are in agreement with the emerging picture of thick discs being diverse and complex components of external galaxies, which when studied in detail, can provide vital constrains for the formation and evolution of disc galaxies.

 

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Philippa Hartley (Square Kilometre Array Organisation, University of Manchester)
08/06/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Louise Breuval (Paris Observatory (LESIA))

Abstract

Cepheid stars play a considerable role as astronomical distances indicators thanks to the empirical relation between their pulsation period and intrinsic luminosity: the PL relation. The uncertainty on this relation is the largest contributor to the error budget of the Hubble constant, that describes the Universe's expansion. The value of the Hubble constant is currently at the center of a major controversy: while it is estimated at 67.4 +/-0.5 km/s/Mpc by the Planck satellite, the local measurement based on Cepheids is larger by 4 sigma, with a value of 74.0 +/-1.4 km/s/Mpc. This discrepancy may provide evidence for physics beyond the standard model: it is therefore critical to improve the PL calibration with precise and accurate distance measurements of Cepheids.

In 2018, the second data release of the Gaia satellite (Gaia DR2) provided parallaxes for 1.3 billion stars with an unprecedented precision. However, Cepheids are bright stars and are often saturated in detectors. Moreover, the variations in brightness and color that occurs for variable stars like Cepheids are not yet taken into account in the Gaia data reduction. Therefore, Cepheids parallaxes can be affected by systematics due to their photometric variability.

In order to avoid these issues, a solution is to find stable and faint companion stars in the close environment of Cepheids. Using 36 indirect, unbiased and accurate distances based on Gaia DR2, I calibrate the PL relation and revise a previous value of the Hubble constant based on HST measurements of Galactic Cepheids.

 

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Anke Arentsen (Observatoire astronomique de Strasbourg)

Abstract

Our Milky Way still hosts remnants from the era of first star formation in the form of (very) metal-poor stars, which we can study in detail. They are useful to learn about the First Stars and the conditions in the early Universe, and they provide unique insights into the early formation and evolution of our Galaxy. Metal-poor stars are typically searched for in the Galactic halo and the dwarf galaxies surrounding the Milky Way. However, a prediction of simulations is that the fraction of metal-poor stars that are very old is highest towards the centers of galaxies: in their bulges.

The task of finding the most metal-poor stars in the inner Milky Way faces many challenges, including large dust extinction, severe crowding and a high average metallicity of the dominant stellar population in the bulge. In this talk, I will present the Pristine Inner Galaxy Survey (PIGS) which has reached unprecedented efficiency in finding metal-poor stars in the bulge region, employing metallicity-sensitive photometry to select candidates for spectroscopic follow-up.

For the first time, using PIGS, we can study the the kinematics of thousands of (very) metal-poor inner Galaxy stars, and investigate the occurrence of the chemically peculiar carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars in this region. I will present these results and discuss what they can teach us about the origin of the oldest component of our Galaxy.

 

03/06/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — "ALMA Large program highlight talks”. PHANGS-ALMA : Our First Cloud-Scale Survey of Molecular Gas in Galaxies
Professor Adam Leroy (Ohio State University)

Abstract

I will present "PHANGS-ALMA" a multi-cycle ALMA survey of 90 nearby galaxies built around an ALMA Large Program. Leveraging ALMA's amazing combination of resolution, sensitivity, and mapping speed, PHANGS-ALMA mapped the CO 2-1 emission, our basic tracer of molecular gas in galaxies, at 1" = 50-150 pc resolution scales across essentially all accessible very nearby star-forming galaxies. This resolution represents a major leap forward because, for the first time, PHANGS-ALMA resolves the molecular gas across whole galaxies into individual star-forming molecular clouds, giving access to the demographics, life cycle, and properties of tens of thousands of molecular clouds across a representative set of z=0 galaxies. I will give an overview of the motivation and execution of the survey, and then highlight results on the demographics of molecular clouds, kinematics and structure of gas at high resolution, and the links between molecular gas and star formation. I will also highlight a few aspects of our technical work that may be of interest to the expert audience at JAO.

 

01/06/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Giulia Santucci (University of New South Wales)

Abstract

Galaxy mergers play an important role in how galaxies evolve over time, however extragalactic astronomers do not yet totally understand the process by which those mergers happen.

The brightest galaxies of groups and clusters are extremely luminous galaxies, usually located in the centres of those systems –central galaxies. Simulations predict that these central galaxies have undergone more mergers than other similarly luminous galaxies, making them an excellent test of the merger process. The recent merger history of galaxies can be read through their stellar population gradients. Central galaxies with active merger histories are predicted to have shallower metallicity gradients than satellite galaxies of a similar mass. We examined the stellar population gradients (age, metallicity and alpha-element abundance ratios) of central galaxies in the SAMI galaxy survey to determine whether they are offset from similarly massive satellite galaxies in order to reach a better understanding of the role of mergers in galaxy formation and evolution.

 

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Bachar Wehbe (Institute of Astrophysics and Space Sciences (IA))

Abstract

Astronomical observations with ground-based telescopes are affected by differential atmospheric dispersion, a consequence of the wavelength-dependent index of refraction of the atmosphere. In high resolution astronomical instruments, an Atmospheric Dispersion Corrector (ADC) is mandatory to avoid wavelength dependent losses. Even though an ADC seems a simple component, but from the design phase to on-sky commissioning, several problems can occur. The design of an ADC is based on atmospheric models that, to the best of our knowledge, were never tested on-sky. Different models shows a variation of 50 milli-arcseconds (mas), a value close to the required residuals from current ADCs. During the commissioning, detecting a variation of 50 mas in a PSF of 1 arcseconds, is not an easy task. We will present a method to measure on-sky the atmospheric dispersion based on measuring the PSF centroid of each wavelength using cross-dispersed spectra. We are able to characterize different atmospheric models with an accuracy of 18 mas. As for the on-sky commissioning, we present a simple concept based on the ellipse fit of intensity contour plots of the PSF. This method will allow us to better align the ADC in terms of prisms angles and total dispersion direction using on-sky measurements. In this talk we show the study we did to improve the phases of an ADC from design to on-sky commissioning.

May 2021

27/05/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — From Reverend Bob Evans to the LSST: an evolution in supernova detection and followup – the PESSTO perspective
Joe Anderson (ESO)

Abstract

PESSTO, the Public ESO Spectroscopic Survey of Transient Objects (and its successors) has been in operation for almost 10 years. This collaboration brought together a significant fraction of the ESO extra-galactic transient community, with current membership standing at more than 250. During the last decade of operation, PESSTO and other teams have significantly changed the way transient detection, selection and followup is achieved. This has made such observations more efficient, but was also required following the significant increase in transient discovery rate.  At the heart of PESSTO operations is the Marshall - this ingests transient detection information and is used to prioritise objects for spectroscopic classification and followup. In this talk I will first discuss the history of supernova detections: from individuals eye-balling photographic plates to community 'brokers' automatically filtering thousands of possible new transients each night. I will then outline the PESSTO collaboration and its operations with specific focus on how the Marshall enables efficient operations, collaboration, and scientific return. I end with an outlook of how transient science will evolve in the next decade with the arrival of the LSST among other surveys.

25/05/21 (Tuesday)
09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
ESO Cosmic Duologues
Amina Helmi & Ana Bonaca (Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, University of Groningen, NL & Jeremiah Horrocks Institute, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK)
20/05/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Unconscious Bias
Dr. Paola Pinilla (MPIA, Germany)

Abstract

Around 99% of the information processed by our brain happens unconsciously, leaving space for unconscious bias to affect our decisions. When making a decision, it’s human nature to look for anything that supports what we already believe, or notice something we hope to find, or that feels comfortable. This means that anything different, or anything that goes against our existing beliefs is either ignored or strengthens a negative bias. This dangerous habit of selective thinking means we never see the full picture; which is why we need to train our minds to look at things differently.

In this workshop, we will talk about the different types of unconscious bias and how they can have an effect on diversity and inclusion in our workplace. We will provide some examples of how hiring, evaluation, and promotion are affected by unconscious bias in the scientific community. We will discuss a couple of little exercises to get you thinking about your potential unconscious biases and we will finish by providing some tips of how to create positive change in our scientific community. 

19/05/21 (Wednesday)
09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Informal Discussion
Talk — Reflexive Metrics – Reactivity and practices of quantification in research evaluation in Astronomy
Julia Heuritsch (HU Berlin)
18/05/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Noel Castro Segura (University of Southampton)

Abstract

I will present the results of a unique multi-wavelength campaigns focused on the recently discovered LMXB Swift J1858. This system displayed extreme variability in both X-ray and optical bands, similar to the famous black hole binary V404 Cyg during its 2015 outburst. Our observations covered the full frequency range from X-ray to radio and were provided by observatories including XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, NICER, VLTs, Gemini, GTC, VLA, MeerKAT and HST. A key feature of the campaign is a 4-hour window during which we obtained time-resolved, strictly simultaneous observations across the whole electromagnetic spectrum.

I will walk you through the findings obtained by monitoring programs of independent instruments, then we will step back into a multi-wavelength perspective to get insights in the geometry of the system and the physical mechanism driving its outflows, unveiled thanks to the unprecedented coordination of several major observatories across the globe. We will finish with an overview of the findings of the system and how coordinated multi-wavelength campaigns can help us to understand the physics of compact objects and how they interact with their environment.

All of the survey data products will be made available to the scientific community in a ready-to-use format accompanied by practical examples.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Karolina Kubiak (CENTRA, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa)

Abstract

Brown dwarfs are a critical link between the realms of stars and planets. Their formation process is one of the crucial missing pieces in our understanding of how star and planet formation work. Understanding the origin of brown dwarfs is the main motivation for recent deep studies of star-forming regions and young clusters. The major question driving our studies is whether the birth environmentaffects their formation efficiency, as predicted in several formation scenarios. The expectation is that high gas or stellar densities or the presence of massive OB stars may be factors that boost the incidence of newly formed brown dwarfs with respect tostars. To address this question we investigate the stellar and sub-stellar objects in the drastically different environments of massive young clusters RCW 38 and NGC 2244 and that of nearby star-forming regions. Here we will present the current status ofyoung brown dwarf studies, compare the low-mass Initial Mass Functions in a variety of Milky Way environments. For RCW38, we will address the high-mass IMF and the shallow slope that we see in the center (mass segregation or not?). We will summarised theimplications of these results for our understanding of sub-stellar formation processes.

11/05/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Katja Fahrion (ESO, Garching)

Abstract

Nuclear star clusters (NSCs) are extremely dense stellar systems that reside in the centres of ~70% of galaxies, including our Milky Way. This nucleation fraction even reaches > 90% forgalaxy masses ~ 10^9 M_sun. NSCs have similar sizes to globular clusters (GCs), but are even more massive and dense. NSCs often co-exist with supermassive black holes and follow distinct scaling relations with properties of the host galaxy, but it is stilldebated how NSCs form and grow. Generally, two main scenarios are discusse: in-situ from gas at the galactic centre or via the dissipationless accretion of GCs that spiral inwards due to dynamical friction. Most likely, a mixture of both pathways is realized in nature, but the dominant channel nor how it relates with the host galaxy are known.

Constraining NSC formation in galaxies requires a complete view of both thekinematics and chemical properties of the host galaxy, the NSC, and the GC system. Sucha study is challenging, but possible with modern day integral-field spectroscopy. I will present how MUSE can be used to determine the dominant NSC formation channel for individual galaxies, in conjunction with a semi-analytical model of NSC formation. These complementary approaches reveal for the first time how the NSC formation depends on properties of the host galaxy and show a transition of NSC formation via GC-inspiral to in-situ star formation with increasing NSC mass.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Sabine Thater (University of Vienna)

Abstract

The formation of supermassive black holes (MBH) is thought to be tightly linked to the formation and growth of their host galaxy bulges. MBH mass measurements of local galaxies based on stellar or gaseous motion reveal strong correlations of the MBH mass with bulge properties, such as bulge mass, stellar velocity dispersion and light concentration. However, the black hole sample and its covered mass range are limited, revealing an increased scatter for the high and low mass end of the scaling relations. While it is crucial to expand and constrain these regions in order to investigate on the universality of the scaling relations for different galaxy populations and possible different galaxy formation scenarios, the MBH measurements are challenging due to the need of time-expensive (preferable IFU) data and resolution arguments.

I present my dynamical MBH measurements of almost 20 galaxies expanding on both the high and low mass end of the scaling relations. For our measurements we made wide use of IFU data, such as SINFONI, NIFS, MUSE, ALMA, and more. We tooks special care in testing dynamical measurement methods on different tracers (stars vs gas) and other systematics. I will also discuss formation scenarios of galaxies harbouring strongly undermassive black holes or possibly no black holes at all. A strong tool to give implications about the formation and growth of MBHs is the analysis of the galaxy's central orbital distributions. I will conclude my talk with a discussion on what we can learn from examining orbital distributions in galaxy evolution and formation context and how measurement uncertainties are affecting our MBH results.

 

06/05/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Imposter syndrome
Dr. Paola Pinilla (MPIA, Germany)

Abstract

 

Imposter syndrome --- a condition characterized by the persistent belief that one is not good enough for the role they have, only ended up there by luck or deception, and that it is only a matter of time before they are discovered to be a fraud --- seems to be a fairly pervasive issue in academia. Yet, despite it's prevalence and the growing conversation about it, there is still a significant lack of awareness --- when it is described to them, many people are surprised by how closely it represents their own experience, and surprised to learn that it is a recognized and well-studied condition that affects other people as well.

This workshop aims to combat this lack of awareness. It will consist of a mixture of presented slides and active exercises, with the intent to

 

  • present information about and raise awareness of the imposter syndrome in academia
  • help participants better identify, understand, and engage with their own imposter thoughts
  • give participants a chance to talk to others about their experiences with imposter syndrome, in a safe environment
  • give participants a solid foundation on which to build future understanding, and continue discussing these things and supporting each other, on their own

Based on our past experience, it doesn't take much exposure to or knowledge about this subject to potentially make a big difference in people's lives; and the more people know about it and talk about, the easier it will be for all of us to deal with it.

05/05/21 (Wednesday)
09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Informal Discussion
Talk — The ESO community poll 2020
Antoine Mérand (ESO)

Abstract

ESO is regularly updating its science-driven perspective with the goal to provide the best facilities and services for its community. As part of this exercise, ESO polled its users between January and February 2020. Questions were inspired by the previous poll (Primas et al. 2015), to probe any evolution of community opinions and profile, with an emphasis on the future of the VLT/I - following the “VLT in 2030” workshop (Mérand & Leibundgut, 2019). Of 14,000 registered unique users polled, from the ESO and European ALMA portals, 1,674 complete responses were received, a response rate comparable to the 2015 poll. The present poll was split into three parts: 1) profile of respondents; 2) current and future observing facilities; 3) ESO in the coming decade.

I will present the main results of the polls which will appear in the upcoming issue of the ESO Messenger.

04/05/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Giuliana Cosentino (Chalmers University of Technology)

Abstract

Despite the importance of massive stars and star clusters for the energy content, stellar population and evolution of galaxies, the mechanism that ignites their formation in molecular clouds is still poorly addressed. Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs) are the likely precursors of massive stars. It has been suggested that IRDC formation and dynamical processing by multiple shock episodes triggered by bubbles, such as HII regions and Supernova Remnants (SNRs), can efficiently initiate star formation within these clouds. It is thus important to understand the conditions of density and temperature set by large-scale shocks in IRDCs to constrain the ignition of star formation in these objects. In this work, I will present the large scale shock triggered by the SNR W44 in the IRDC G034. I will show how the shock, probed by Silicon Monoxide (SiO) and observed with ALMA, enhances the density of the processed gas to values compatible with those required for massive star formation and has helped to shape the cloud. Thanks to the high resolution achieved by ALMA, the internal physical structure of the shock was resolved for the first time, providing a direct test to Magneto-Hydro-Dynamic (MHD) shock theories. Moved by these results, we have initiated the large single-dish observing program SHREC, aimed to observe SiO(2-1) emission in SNRs interacting with molecular clouds. During the talk, I will briefly introduce the aim and technical aspects of SHREC and present preliminary results obtained toward the SNRs IC443 and W41.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Yoshinobu Fudamoto (NAOJ/Waseda University)

Abstract

Over the past decades, several important steps have been taken to understand the formation and evolution of first generations of galaxies. In particular, thanks to deep multi-wavelength observations by Hubble Space Telescope (HST), studies of early galaxies have now been pushed well into the Epoch of Reionization, i.e. up to z~10-11 only 500Myr after the Big Bang (e.g. Bouwens+15, Oesch+16, Atek+18). However, our current knowledge beyond z~2-3 is significantly biased to the rest-frame ultraviolet observations as it’s only accessible by deep optical/near-infrared observations, and dust-obscured properties of high-redshift galaxies hasremained mostly unknown. This situation was revolutionized by extremely sensitive and high-resolution far-infrared (FIR) interferometers such as ALMA and NOEMA. First ALMA observations showed us surprises by finding fainter FIR emission than expected fromlow-redshift galaxy observations, suggesting an evolution of dust-obscured galaxy properties at high-redshift (e.g. Capak+15, Bouwens+16). To understand this potential evolution with statistical sample and with wide range of galaxy parameters, large ALMA observations were required. In this talk, I will discuss the evolution of dust attenuation and dust-obscured star-formation of galaxies at z~3 to z~6 revealed by ALMA, including a recent ALMA large program: ALPINE and an on-going large program: REBELS.

April 2021

20/04/21 (Tuesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Talk — Can uncertainties in the evolution of massive stars explain properties of gravitational wave progenitors?
Poojan Agrawal (Swinburne University of Technology)

Abstract

Massive stars play a critical role in the evolution of galaxies and star clusters. Recent observations of the latter have highlighted the need for systematic studies dedicated to probing the impact of massive stellar evolution on the properties of stellar populations. While the use of fitting formulae to stellar tracks remains a popular choice for modelling stellar evolution in population synthesis codes, these formulae are not adaptable to changes. In this talk, I will discuss and present results from an alternative approach, one that is more adaptable: Method of Interpolation for Single Star Evolution (METISSE). It can readily make use of stellar models computed with different stellar evolution codes and compare their predictions for populations of stars. Using METISSE with data from different stellar evolution codes, I will show how various physical ingredients used in the evolution of massive stars, such as the treatment of their radiation dominated envelopes, can lead to differences in their evolutionary properties. I will discuss the implications of these differences on the evolution and interaction of stars inbinaries, and how they can impact compact binary mergers and the properties of gravitational wave events.

09:30, Vitacura | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Chris Karwin (Clemson University)

Abstract

Massive black holes at the centers of galaxies can launch powerful wide-angle winds, which if sustained over time, can unbind the gas from the stellar bulges of galaxies. These winds, also known as ultra-fast outflows (UFOs), may be responsible for the observed scaling relation between the masses of the central black holes and the velocity dispersions of stars in galactic bulges. Propagating through the galaxy, the wind should interact with the interstellar medium creating a strong shock, similar to those observed in supernovae explosions, which is able to accelerate charged particles to high energies. In this talk I'll present the Fermi Large Area Telescope detection of gamma-rayemission from these shocks in a small sample of galaxies exhibiting energetic winds. The detection implies that energetic black-hole winds transfer ~0.04% of their mechanical power to gamma rays and that the gamma-ray emission represents the onset of the wind-host interaction.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Poojan Agrawal (Swinburne University of Technology)

Abstract

Massive stars play a critical role in the evolution of galaxies and star clusters. Recent observations of the latter have highlighted the need for systematic studies dedicated to probing the impact of massive stellar evolution on the properties of stellar populations. While the use of fitting formulae to stellar tracks remains a popular choice for modelling stellar evolution in population synthesis codes, these formulae are not adaptable to changes. In this talk, I will discuss and present results from an alternative approach, one that is more adaptable: Method of Interpolation for Single Star Evolution (METISSE). It can readily make use of stellar models computed with different stellar evolution codes and compare their predictions for populations of stars. Using METISSE with data from different stellar evolution codes, I will show how various physical ingredients used in the evolution of massive stars, such as the treatment of their radiation dominated envelopes, can lead to differences in their evolutionary properties. I will discuss the implications of these differences on the evolution and interaction of stars inbinaries, and how they can impact compact binary mergers and the properties of gravitational wave events.

13/04/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Vitacura | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Sebastiaan L. Zoutendijk (Leiden Observatory, Leiden University)

Abstract

Despite the long history of dark matter, its nature is still unknown.Cold dark matter (CDM) remains the generally accepted workinghypothesis.  Apparent shortcomings in the ability of CDM to explainvarious observations have been noted and have led to the development ofalternative hypotheses, but so far none have been able to dethrone CDM. This is partly due to the presence of baryons in galaxies, whose feedback processes and radiative properties are far more complex thanthe physics of dark matter. In the presence of baryonic feedback, many dark-matter models start losing their distinctive profiles, leaving usunable to distinguish between them.

One promising way out of this conundrum is to study dark matter in environments with as few baryons as possible. Ultra-faint dwarf galaxies (UFDs) are the faintest, least massive, and most dark matter–dominated galaxies known. They are predicted to have dark-matter distributions unchanged by baryonic feedback.

In this colloquium I will present the current state of research to constrain the nature and properties of dark matter using UFDs, includingthe first results from a novel 100-hour MUSE survey of UFDs. I will address the constraints on primordial black holes from their dynamical effects on stellar distributions, as well as the constraints on various types of particulate dark matter (weakly interacting massive particles, axion-like particles, self-interacting dark matter, and fuzzy dark matter) from emission-line searches and the first determined dark matter–density profile of a UFD. I will end with an outlook for the near future of this field.

 

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Adrian Bittner (ESO, Garching)

Abstract

Bars are a major driver of secular evolution in disc galaxies, promoting the inflow of gas to the centre, where stellar structures, such as nuclear discs are built. We constrain the formation of these structures by deriving their stellar kinematics and mean population properties. To this end, we use observations with unprecedented spatial resolution, obtained with the MUSE integral-field spectrograph for a sample of 21 Milky Way-type galaxies in the local Universe. We show that nuclear discs are characterised by a high rotational support, i.e. near-circular orbits with low velocity dispersions, and are significantly younger, more metal-rich, and less [α/Fe]-enhanced, as compared to their surroundings. These findings are consistent with the picture of bar-driven secular evolution and contrast with the formation of old and kinematically hot classical bulges in violent accretion events. Moreover, nuclear discs exhibit well-defined radial gradients of the population properties with single slopes, suggesting that they are continuous components from their outer edge to the galaxy centre. We argue that these continuous (stellar) nuclear discs may form from a series of bar-built (gas-rich) nuclear rings that grow in radius, as the bar evolves. In this picture, nuclearrings are simply the star-forming outer edge of nuclear discs. Finally, we do not find evidence for the presence of classical bulges in the centres of these galaxies. This could result from feedback processes efficiently preventing the formation of classical bulges or may challenge the paradigm of hierarchical structure formation, questions we will address in a dedicated MUSE survey.

06/04/21 (Tuesday)
09:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Mathieu Renzo (Center for Computational Astrophysics - Flatiron Institute & Columbia University)

Abstract

Since the first direct detection in 2015, gravitational waves havecompletely changed the landscape of known stellar mass black holes(BH). This gives unprecedented constraints on the evolution and deathof the most massive stars, which are otherwise hard to study dueto their rarity. In particular, stellar evolution predicts theexistence of a gap in the BH mass distribution, due topair-instability evolution. Its location between ~45-125 Msun is oneof the most robust predictions of stellar theory, primarily sensitiveonly to uncertain nuclear reaction rates. This will allow for the useof gravitational-wave detectors as nuclear astrophysicsexperiments. On the other hand, ~3% of the population of BHs inferredhave masses within the pair-instability gap. Explaining these BHsrequires either dynamics, gas accretion, or exoticphysics.

Pair-instability should also produce visible electromagnetictransient, however, an uncontroversial detection is stilllacking. Upcoming large time-domain surveys will soon be able toreveal even very rare transients and should identify these.

In this talk, I will review the physics of (pulsational) pair-instability inthe context of the latest gravitational-wave and time-domainsurveys. I will show the wide range of theoretical predictions andtheir trends with stellar mass, and highlight what we have alreadylearned from the binary BH mergers detected. Finally, I will discuss possible ways to populate the pair-instability gap andpotential open problems with some of the scenarios that have been
proposed.

09:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Ylva Gotberg (Carnegie Observatories, Pasadena)

Abstract

Most massive stars spend their lives in so close orbit with a companion star that severe mass exchange or even coalescence is inevitable as the stars evolve and swell. A third of massive stars are thus stripped of their fluffy, hydrogen-rich envelopes, leaving the compact helium core exposed. These stripped stars are so hot that most of their radiation is emitted in the ionizing regime. Using evolutionary and spectral models of stripped stars, I will show how they sometimes dominate the ionizing emission from full stellar populations and even significantly contribute to cosmic reionization. With their hard ionizing spectra, stripped stars possibly leave observable traces, for example in the nebular spectrum of distant galaxies. Apart from being ionizing sources, stripped stars are also interesting to consider as gravitational wave emitters. Creating a population model, we predict that several stripped stars orbiting compact objects will be detectable by LISA.

March 2021

25/03/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Special Series: "ALMA Large Program Highlight Talks". REBELS: an ALMA view of galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization
Dr. Renske Smit (Liverpool John Moores University)

Abstract

In the past decade hundreds of galaxy candidates have been identified in the Epoch of Reionization, selected from their rest-frame UV light. Only a handful of these sources, however, have spectroscopic redshift determinations and we have limited understanding of their physical properties. The ALMA large program REBELS: Reionization Era Bright Emission Lines Survey has been designed to take a major leap in our understanding of these early sources, by collecting the first statistical sample of spectroscopically confirmed galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization. Spectrally scanning 40 sources for [CII]158 or [OIII]88, REBELS is identifying the most massive ISM reservoirs at z>6.5. I will present the motivation, strategy and first results of this ongoing large program. As well as the redshift confirmations, I will show how the identified [CII] lines can be used to probe the low-resolution kinematics of these sources, indicating likely rotation or ongoing merger activity. In parallel to the line detections, we obtain constraints on the dust build-up within these early sources and I will present some of the very distant (U)LIRG candidates found in REBELS. The ALMA observations are complemented by a coordinated effort to constrain the rest-frame UV spectra of these sources with VLT, Keck and MMT. Finally, I will show how state of the simulations - developed within the REBELS team - help to interpret the physical properties of these distant galaxies.

23/03/21 (Tuesday)
11:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Belen Alcalde Pampliega (ESO, Chile)

Abstract

The ultimate goal in galaxy studies is to have a complete picture of galaxy formation and evolution across the history of the Universe. A robust determination of the abundance of massive (even quiescent) galaxies at high-redshift is essential to constrain current galaxy formation models.

In this context, this work addresses the challenge of studying the build-up of massive galaxies adding a new population of optically faint (HST-dark) Balmer Break Galaxies (BBGs), which are bright at longer wavelengths (even in the sub-mm regime), to the general population of massive galaxies at z > 3. We study in detail the physical properties of the general population of known massive galaxies at z > 3 and we analyze the sample of BBGs by comparing them with a mass-limited (M > 10^10M☉and z > 3) sample and a color-selected (H −[3.6] > 2.5) sample extracted from the CANDELS catalogs published for these fields.

We have therefore detected a new population of previously unknown optically dark massive red galaxies and provide a more complete sample of the general population of massive galaxies at z > 3. This population of massive distant galaxies may represent the progenitors of most massive local galaxies. In the context of the current paradigm of galaxy formation, it is essential to constrain and confirm the number density of high redshift massive galaxies, which will provide crucial information to expand our understanding of galaxy evolution. The existence of this numerous population of massive galaxies at high redshifts represents a challenge for existing cosmological models and state-of-the-art simulations.

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Eloisa Poggio (Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur & INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di Torino)

Abstract

In a cosmological setting, the disk of a galaxy is expected to continuously experience gravitational torques and perturbations from a variety of sources, which can cause the disc to wobble, flare and warp. Specifically, the study of galactic warps and their dynamical nature can potentially reveal key information on the formation history of galaxies and the mass distribution of their halos. Our Milky Way presents a unique case study for galactic warps, thanks to detailed knowledge of its stellar distribution and kinematics. Using a simple model of how the warp’s orientation is changing with time, we measure the precession rate of the Milky Way’s warp using 12 million giant stars from Gaia Data Release 2, finding that it is precessing at 10.86 ± 0.03 (statistical) ± 3.20 (systematic) km/s/kpc in the direction of Galactic rotation, about one third the angular rotation velocity at the Sun’s position in the Galaxy. The direction and magnitude of the warp’s precession rate favour the scenario that the warp is the result of a recent or ongoing encounter with a satellite galaxy, rather than the relic of the ancient assembly history of the Galaxy. Using N-body simulations, we analyse the vertical response of the Galactic disc to the repeated impacts of a satellite similar to the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy, finding that the instantaneous vertical pattern speeds in the disc have a constraining power in the context of a Milky Way-satellite interaction.

17/03/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
ESO Thirty Minute Talks
Talk — TBA
Santiago Gil (ESO)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
ESO Thirty Minute Talks
Talk — High-angular resolution observations of submillimeter water masers with ALMA in YSO's across all masses
Santiago Gil (ESO)

Abstract

Water is one of the few molecules capable of producing maser emission in star-forming regions and it has been detected in a wide range of masses from low mass to massive young stellar objects. Most of the previous studies have been focused on the water maser transition at 22 GHz (~1 cm), which constitutes a good tracer of mass-loss activity in young stars of all masses, although the specific conditions required to pump water masers at 22 GHz can be reached also at the inner parts of circumstellar disks. Interestingly the water molecule shows several maser transitions at submillimeter wavelengths (falling in most of the available low-to-high frequency ALMA bands), which makes telescopes like APEX and ALMA excellent facilities to follow up in the submillimeter range the studies done in the past decades at 22 GHz. We have recently performed a search for water masers at 321 and 325 GHz using APEX antenna towards a sample of twenty young stellar objects with a wide range of masses, and that emit at the 22 GHz transition, obtaining detection rates between 30%-45%. In this talk I will present the work I performed during my online internship at ESO and the main results, which ultimate goal was to test if submillimeter water masers are good tools to probe at high angular resolution jet-disk systems across all masses in star-forming regions.

16/03/21 (Tuesday)
11:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Martin Rey (Lund University)

Abstract

I present results from high-resolution, "genetically modified", cosmological simulations quantifying the diversity in the structural properties of faint dwarf galaxies.

Ultra-faint dwarf galaxies are the least luminous objects in the Universe. Their shallow potential well makes them highly sensitive to the interaction between dynamical mass growth and internal, feedback processes. Thissensitivity provides an ideal laboratory for testing galaxy formation models, while also generating significant scatter in their stellar and gaseous properties. Quantifying the expected scatter will be essential to interpret findings in the next generation of deep, wide sky, surveys (e.g. LSST).

To begin this quantification, I present a suite of simulated low-mass, field dwarf galaxies, evolved with cosmological zoom simulations capable of resolving the explosions of individual supernovae (Rey et al. 2019, 2020). These high-resolution simulations are complemented with the "genetic modification" approach, allowing us to resimulate chosen galaxies making targeted changes to their cosmological mass growth history.This unique combination of abilities providesa complete overview of the interaction between feedback and assembly in these systems.

I will show how this interplay regulates the ability of the lowest-mass galaxies to accrete fresh gas at late times, leading to diverse cold gas content at similar stellar masses. I will further show how this accretion can allow dwarfs to re-ignite and sustain continuous, low levels of star formation until today, highly reminiscent of observed star-forming low-mass dwarfs (e.g. Leo T, Leo P).

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Julia Victoria Seidel (University of Geneva)

Abstract

One of the most intriguing outcomes of the young field of exoplanet research is the emergence of highly-irradiated planets, located much closer to their host star than any of the Solar System planets. These planets, which give us a glimpse into the future of our Solar System once the Sun reaches its final life stages, have been studied in-depth, allowing us to learn more about their temperature profiles and present molecules and atoms. However, the characterisation of atmospheric dynamics, a crucial part totruly understand an atmosphere, has severely lagged behind.

Until recently, our only glimpse into the winds on exoplanets was restricted to global circulation models (e.g. Showman et al. 2009, Parmentier et al. 2018), probing only the lowest layers of the atmosphere, and atmospheric escape models, which describe the mass outflow far out in the exosphere (e.g. Lecavelier des Etangs et al. 2010, Bourrier et al. 2017). Thanks to these techniques, we know that the lower atmosphere is dominated by zonal winds,while the exosphere expands into space. But what happens in the vast area between these regimes?

This pressing question has been answered in my PhD work, where I, for the first time, utilise resolved spectral lines which probe the missing layers of the atmosphere to understand their atmospheric dynamics (Seidel et al. 2019, 2020a, 2020d submitted). During my talk, I will present a consolidated view of highly-irradiated exoplanet atmosphere dynamics, focussing on the connection between the different atmospheric layers.

11/03/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Studying planet formation with ALMA: DSHARP and beyond
Dr. Andrea Isella (Rice University)

Abstract

ALMA observations of circumstellar disks obtained by the "Disk Substractures at High Angular Resolution Project" (DSHARP) have revealed that the dust distribution in the vast majority of (large) circumstellar disks is substructured. Dust rings are the most common features, but crescents and spiral arms were also observed. Whereas the origin of these structures is still debated, there are many indications that they might be directly connected to the formation of planetary systems. During my talk, I will provide a quick overview of the main results obtained by DSHARP and discuss more recent studies, both theoretical and observational, that highlight the relation between disk substructures and planets.

09/03/21 (Tuesday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Kathryn Grasha (Australian National University)

Abstract

I present the Stromlo Stellar Tracks, a set of stellar evolutionary tracks, computed by modifying the Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) 1D stellar evolution package, to fit the Galactic Concordance abundances for hot massive Main-Sequence stars. Until now, all stellar evolution tracks are computed at solar, scaled-solar, or alpha-element enhanced abundances, and none of these models correctly represent the Galactic Concordance abundances at different metallicities. This paper is the first implementation of Galactic Concordance abundances to the stellar evolution models. The Stromlo tracks cover massive stars (10<Msun<300) with varying rotations evolved from the pre-main sequence to the end of Carbon burning. I find that the implementation of Galactic Concordance abundances is critical for the evolution of main-sequence, massive hot stars in order to estimate accurate stellar outputs (L, T, g), which, in turn, have a significant impact on determining the ionizing photon luminosity budgets.I additionally support prior findings of the importance that rotation plays on the evolution of massive stars and their ionizing budget. The evolutionary tracks for our Galactic Concordance abundance scaling provide a more physically motivated approach than simple uniform abundance scaling with metallicity for the analysis of HII regions and have considerable implications in determining nebular emission lines and metallicity. Therefore, it is important to refine the existing stellar evolutionary models forcomprehensive high-redshift extragalactic studies.

02/03/21 (Tuesday)
11:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Ashley Thomas Barnes (AIfA University of Bonn)

Abstract

High-mass stars inject a large amount of energy and momentum -stellar feedback -into the interstellar medium (ISM) during their relatively short lifetimes. The feedback from these stars can influence the ISM both locally (<1pc) and across their entire host galaxy (~1kpc), and occurs through a variety of feedback processes; e.g. protostellar outflows, stellar winds, ionizing radiation. The most important of these feedback mechanisms for the overall energy and momentum budget of ISM occurs at the end of thestars lifetime, when they explode as supernovae. However, the efficiency with which SNe couple with their environment strongly depends on their local gas density distribution. Hence, the early pre-SNe feedback processes from high-mass stars play a crucialrole in setting this environment into which SNe later explode, and, therefore, in effect limit the efficiency of SNe feedback. In this talk, I will discuss our recent efforts in a quantitative study of pre-SNe feedback mechanisms within both the centre Milky Way, and a large sample of nearby extragalactic systems. In these analyses, we focus on the balance of various internal and external pressures within young HII regions. The study of the Galactic Centre represents the first such study in a high-pressureenvironment, which has important implications for high-redshift environments. The study of extragalactic systems is the first to attempt such a study on a statistically significant sample of HII regions (>2000). Together, these make key advancements in our understanding of young stellar feedback as a function of environment.

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Nikki Zabel (University of Groningen)

Abstract

Many galaxies in the local Universe do not live alone, but in groups or even clusters. With many galaxies in little space, as well as the presence of a hot intracluster medium (ICM), the evolution of these galaxies is different from their isolated counterparts. In particular, galaxy clusters host a relatively high number of passive galaxies. Several mechanisms play a role in this, related tothe ICM (e.g. ram pressure stripping) or the galaxy number density (e.g. galaxy-galaxy interactions). That these mechanisms affect the atomic gas in galaxies (HI) is well known. However, whether it also affects the more tightly bound and centrally locatedmolecular gas (H2) is less obvious. In this talk I will present results from the ALMA Fornax Cluster Survey (AlFoCS), an ALMA survey of the CO in Fornax cluster galaxies. I will discuss the molecular gas content in these galaxies, show resolved images of its morphology and kinematics, and show how it differs from galaxies in the field at fixed stellar mass. Furthermore, I will present results from the collaboration I lead between AlFoCS and the MUSE survey Fornax3D, in which we exploit the powers of ALMA and MUSE to study the resolved star formation relation (Kennicutt-Schmidt relation) in Fornax galaxies. Lastly, I will show some surprising recent results of a study of gas-to-dust ratios in the Fornax cluster compared to the Virgo cluster and the field, using data from ALMA, Herschel, ATCA, and MUSE.

February 2021

25/02/21 (Thursday)
16:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Special Series: "ALMA Large Program Highlight Talks": Early Results from VERTICO, the Virgo Environment Traced in CO Survey
Toby Brown (Herzberg Astronomy & Astrophysics Research Centre, National Research Council of Canada)

Abstract

The Virgo Environment Traced in CO survey (VERTICO) is a pioneering Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) large program that is investigating the effect of environment on molecular gas by mapping the distribution and kinematics of molecular across 51 Virgo Cluster galaxies on sub-kpc scales. As the critical final component of a diverse, homogeneous legacy data set, VERTICO is revealing how physical mechanisms such as ram pressure stripping drive the star formation process in dense environments in unmatched detail. This talk will showcase the early results from the VERTICO team, highlighting evidence for the ability of environment to reach far into galaxies, perturbing molecular gas discs and dictating the efficiency of the star formation process.

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Fifty AU Study of the chemistry and physics of proto-Sun analogues (FAUST): Initial Results
Dr. Satoshi Yamamoto (Tokyo University, Japan)

Abstract

One of the major questions of modern science is how atoms ended up forming the Solar System, the Earth, and life. We know that a crucial step is the formation of the Solar nebula disk. However, we do not know at what precise stage the disk formed and how matter chemically evolved during the disk formation. Recent studies on Solar-type protostars show that the transition from an infalling-rotating envelope to a rotationally supported disk occurs on scales of about 50 au in the young protoatellar ages (≤105 yr). This transition can be accompanied by a drastic chemical change and significant growth of dust grains. In this context, we are conducting the ALMA large program FAUST, in which we observe 13 Class 0/I Solar-type protostars with the goal to fully characterize their physical and chemical structures at 50 au scales. We will answer the following four specific and related questions: (1) disentangle the physical components of the 50—2000 au envelope/disk system; (2) characterize the organic complexity in each of them; (3) probe their ionization structure; (4) measure their molecular deuteration. The output will be a homogeneous database of thousands of images from different lines and species, i.e. an unprecedented source-survey of the chemical diversity of Solar-like protostars on 50 au scales. FAUST will thus provide the community with a legacy dataset that will be a milestone for astrochemistry and star formation studies. After the first publications on L1551 and IRAS15398 (Bianchi et al. 2020; Okoda et al. 2021), the analysis of the FAUST sample is steadily in progress. In this talk, I am going to present some initial highlights. 

 

17/02/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Searching for Nova Shells around 21 Cataclysmic Variables
Lientur Celedon

Abstract

A nova shell is the result of material being ejected after a nova eruption in a Cataclysmic Variable system. It is theorized that every Cataclysmic Variable should have pass by a nova phase at certain moment of their existence. As consequence of this, many Cataclysmic variables should present remnant of shells around there. We search for nova shells remnants around 22 cataclysmic variables system with a period between 3-4 hours. We collected photometry for several CVs system with the OMEGACAM instrument at the VST at Paranal Observatory with a narrow band filter centered in H$\alpha$. The images were adding using the Scamp software and calibrated in flux using the available photometry of Skymap. Our results shows no evidence for remnants of shells around these systems but we determined an upper limit for our detection in flux.
16/02/21 (Tuesday)
11:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Adam Carnall (Institute for Astronomy, Royal Observatory Edinburgh)

Abstract

The properties of the most massive galaxies in the Universe provide fundamental constraints on both galaxy evolution physics and cosmology. However, extracting subtle physical properties, such as galaxy star formation histories (SFHs) and metallicities, from observations is highly challenging, owing to the age-metallicity-dust degeneracy in galaxy spectral shapes and the challenges involved in obtaining high-SNR, well calibrated spectroscopy.

I will discuss past, present and future efforts to constrain the physical properties of massive quiescent galaxies, and what these tell us about galaxy evolution. In particular I will present results from the VANDELS ESO Public Spectroscopic Survey (arXiv:1903.11082), reporting the analysis of 75 high-SNR rest-UV spectra for massive quiescent galaxies at 1.0 < z < 1.3 to extract detailed SFHs using a sophisticated Bayesian statistical approach. I will then discuss ongoing efforts to constrain the stellar metallicities of these galaxies with rest-optical KMOS observations, allowing us to probe the evolution of the stellar mass-metallicity relation across 9 Gyr of cosmic history.

Finally, I will discuss the prospectsfor furthering our understanding with upcoming instrumentation. The Multi-Object Optical and Near-infrared Spectrograph (MOONS) for the VLT will provide a million high quality spectra at z~1, and I am heavily involved in preparations for the ~200 night extragalactic GTO survey MOONRISE. I will also discuss our first steps towards learning about the earliest quiescent galaxies at z > 3 (arXiv:2001.11975), a field that will be revolutionised by the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope.

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Laura Colzi (Centro de Astrobiologí­a (CSIC-INTA))

Abstract

One of the most important tools to investigate the chemical history of our Galaxy and our own Solar System is to measure the isotopic fractionation of chemical elements. This is the process that distributes the less abundant stable isotopes of an element in different molecules. The isotopic ratios are governed by two main processes: 1. chemical evolution of the whole Galaxy due to stellar nucleosynthesis; and 2. local fractionation effects.For the case of nitrogen (N), the 14N/15N isotopic ratio found for the proto-Solar nebula, 440, is significantly higher than that measured in pristine Solar System materials, like comets (around 140). This suggests a local chemical enrichment of 15N during the Solar System formation. However, the causes of the 15N-enrichment are still uncertain.In this talk I will briefly review the state-of-the-art of the astronomical observations and theoretical chemical models devoted to the study of nitrogen fractionation. I will show the overall behavior of the 14N/15N ratio across the Galaxy. In particular, based on a large survey of star-forming regions, we have confirmed that the 14N/15N ratio increases with thegalactocentric distance. This overall trend can be explained by nucleosynthesis Galactic chemical evolution models.Furthermore, I will present the first interferometric maps of N-fractionation of N2H+ towards a star-forming region. Our results highlight the importance of local effects, and in particular of isotope-selective photodissociation of N2, in determining the 15N-enrichments in star-forming regions.

11/02/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — The Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquium Special Series: "ALMA Large Program Highlight Talks" Dust-enshrouded galaxies uncovered by ALMA deep surveys
Prof. Kotaro Kohno (The University of Tokyo)

Abstract

Recent ALMA observations have unveiled the presence of faint (i.e., sub-mJy at lambda ~ 1mm, significantly fainter than the classical bright submillimeter galaxies), dusty star-forming galaxies, which are often invisible in the deepest near-infrared images taken with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and 8-10m class ground-based facilities. They seem to represent the bulk population of massive galaxies at z>3-4 and beyond, which have been completely missed by the Lyman break galaxy selection using HST/WFC3. Due to its faintness, however, detailed physical characterization of the faint dusty star-forming population remains a challenge. Here I report the initial outcomes of the ALMA lensing cluster survey (ACLS), one of the cycle-6 large programs of ALMA. It aims at obtaining high-resolution (~arcsec) images of high-magnification regions of 33 lensing clusters at 1.2-mm in Band-6 with a depth of ~80 uJy (1 sigma). The sample is taken from the best-studied massive clusters including CLASH, HFF, and RELICS. We have detected 134 continuum sources above 5 sigma, and we find a significant number of near-infrared-dark, magnified (but intrinsically faint) dusty star-forming galaxies within the ALCS images. In this talk, I will present some highlights including a cycle-7 follow-up program to characterize the triply imaged near-infrared-dark ALMA source, and the detection of a highly magnified [CII] line emitter at z = 6.02, which is the first spectroscopically confirmed sub-L* galaxy beyond z > 6 that straddles the critical curve.

10/02/21 (Wednesday)
15:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Tittle: ESO Studentship at Chile: my experience as Chilean student
Sebastian Zuniga Fernandez (ESO)

Abstract

 I would like to share with you my experience as a ESO student both scientifically and personally. I will talk about how this experience help me to build my career as an astronomer and also the importance of this programe at Vitacura in the context of Chile/South-American astronomy. Finally, I am going to share some thoughts on inclusion and the importance of preferential positions for "minorities" or under-represented groups.

 

09/02/21 (Tuesday)
11:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Rajika Kuruwita (University of Copenhagen)

Abstract

I present theoretical work done using the AMR MHD code FLASH on the formation of binary stars and the evolution of their discs in these systems. I simulated the collapse of molecular cores until the formation of protostars and followed the early evolution of these systems. I investigated the influence that binarity has on the global evolution of a young stellar system, including looking at mechanisms such as accretion of material, jets and outflows, and dynamical interactions. I find that while in some scenarios binary stars may produce hostile environments for planet formation via the destruction of circumstellar discs, the formation of large circumbinary discs ispossible. This can lead to the formation of planets around binary stars to be just as likely as the their formation around single stars. I also observe a dependence of accretion on episodic accretion, independent of separation. I will also present preliminary work on reproducing observed statistics of protostellar binary separations, and what it means for understanding binary formation pathways.

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Indranil Banik (University of Bonn)

Abstract

Galaxy clusters are the largest gravitationally bound structures in the Universe. Their formation out of small initial density fluctuations holds important clues to the behaviour of gravity over large distances and long timespans. The standard cosmological paradigm (ΛCDM) makes precise predictions for the frequency of galaxy clusters with different mass, and for how often they interact. We recently showed that these predictions are ruled out at over six standard deviations by the observed properties of El Gordo (MNRAS, 500, 5249). Such a massive pair of galaxy clusters should not have formed so early in the universe's history, as demonstrated using two statistical analysis methods focusing on how many objects similar to El Gordo are expected in the surveyed region. We also considered the main alternative to ΛCDM, which is called Milgromian dynamics (MOND). The main assumption of MOND is that once the gravity from a point mass falls below some threshold a_0, it then declines only inversely with distance instead of continuing to follow the inverse square law. In this way, MOND can explain the unexpectedly fast rotation curves of galaxies. On larger scales, MOND would significantly enhance structure formation and thereby explain El Gordo, as demonstrated using a previous cosmological MOND simulation. The lack of similarly extreme objects to El Gordo in the low-redshift Universe might indicate that we are in a large void. There is actually quite strong evidence for such a void, which would also naturally explain the unexpectedly fast local expansion of the Universe (MNRAS, 499, 2845).

04/02/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
TMT (30 minutes talk)
Talk — Deciphering exoplanetary atmospheres with ESPRESSO high dispersion spectroscopy
Elyar Sedaghati (ESO)

Abstract

Detections of ionic, atomic, and molecular species in exoplanetary atmospheres serve as a unique and strong diagnostic of the chemical and dynamical processes driving their formation and evolution. Their detection and abundance measurements could act as indicators of planetary formation scenarios and reveal connections to the primordial protoplanetary disk and the host star. Furthermore, discoveries of atmospheric chemical species allow us to better understand various thermodynamical processes and chemistry, winds in the upper atmosphere, and to probe planetary interiors and various bulk properties through their abundances. Transmission spectroscopy is the preferred choice of technique for probing these mentioned characteristics. Low resolution, high cadence spectroscopy has proved successful is probing bulk properties of an atmosphere, while retrieval techniques have enabled the derivation of atmospheric metallicities. However, such studies have been plagued by the presence of heterogeneities on the stellar surface, as they involve double differential analyses; namely calculations relative a reference star, as well as the radius of the host star.  Recently, Sedaghati et al. (2017) presented the first detection of a metal oxide (TiO) in the atmosphere of WASP-19b, a hot-jupiter short-orbit planet. Metal oxides with absorption bands in the visible domain have been hypothesised as the opacity source in this domain for hot inflated atmospheres of gas giants close to the host star. This discovery was however later disputed by observations performed at the Magellan telescopes (Espinoza et al. (2019)). In this talk I will present results from multiple transit observations of this planet with ESPRESSO at the ICCF, where narrowband transmission spectroscopy, as well as cross correlation technique have been used to show a hint for the presence of TiO in the upper atmosphere, as well as an enhanced scattering towards near-UV, both pointing to a clear atmosphere. I will finally present possible pathways to reconciliation between those discrepant results.

02/02/21 (Tuesday)
11:30, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Boy Lankhaar (Chalmers University of Technology)

Abstract

Understanding the magnetic field strength and morphology of astrophysical regions is of great importance in understanding their dynamics. There exist a number of methods astronomers can employ to trace magnetic field structures, and each have their own limitations. A promising technique to trace the magnetic field morphology around evolved stars, or on the smallest scales of (high-mass) star forming regions, is (sub-)millimeter spectral line polarization observations. Line (linear) polarization can either arise in association with maser radiative transfer, or alternatively, molecular lines polarize through the Goldreich-Kylafis effect. In both cases, the polarization angle traces the magnetic field with a 90-degree ambiguity. In order to remove this ambiguity, and to estimate the observational viability of particular line polarization measurements, polarized line radiative transfer needs to be employed.

In this talk, I present

(i) polarized radiative transfer tools that quantify the polarization of maser radiation,

(ii) a three-dimensional polarized line radiative transfer tool: PORTAL. PORTAL simulates the emergence of thermal molecular line polarization in astrophysical objects of arbitrary geometry and magnetic field morphology,

(iii) A novel polarization mechanism: collisional polarization. Which provides the possibility of directly detecting ambipolar diffusion in disks through the polarization of molecular ions,

and I will discuss observations of molecular line polarization around evolved stars andon the smallest scales of (high-mass) star forming regions.

 

11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Hypatia Colloquium
Virginia Cuciti (Hamburger Sternwarte)

Abstract

Merging between galaxy clusters are the most energetic events in the Universe. Part of the energy released during these events is channeled into shocks and turbulence that accelerate particles in the Intra Cluster Medium (ICM) and produce diffuse cluster-scale radio emission. These sources have been studied for decades using observations at GHz-frequency, however, under many aspects, their origin remains unclear. Given the steepness of the spectrum of these sources, low frequency observations were the crucial, albeit missing, piece of the puzzle to understand these non-thermal phenomena. In this respect, the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR), recently opened a new frequency window (10-240 MHz) in the radio sky, which is the most promising window in this field. On one hand, this is leading to the discovery of new types of diffuse sources and physical interactions in the ICM, such as gently re-energised tails and even beyond the cluster-scale, such as bridges connecting pairs of galaxy clusters. On the other hand, thanks to the superior survey speed and sensitivity of LOFAR, we now have the possibility to analyse large samples of galaxy clusters, even in mass and redshift ranges that were previously inaccessible. In this talk, I will review some of the most important results that have been achieved in the past few years with LOFAR observations of galaxy clusters and I will discuss the ongoing and future work on the largest samples of clusters observed at low frequency.

January 2021

28/01/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Special Series: "ALMA Large Program Highlight Talks". MAPS: Molecules with ALMA at Planet-forming Scales
Dr. Viviana Guzmán (Pontificia Universidad Católica, Chile)

Abstract

Planets form in disks around young stars. The material available in these protoplanetary disks will eventually be accreted onto the star, blown out by winds or incorporated into planets. The chemical composition of nascent planets is therefore directly linked to the disk chemical structures. The distribution of molecules across disks will determine the elemental composition of planets (C/N/O/S) and their access to water and key organic species depending on where they form in the disk. Molecular lines are also powerful tracers of important parameters for planet formation and disk evolution, such as disk ionization, temperature structures, kinematics and gas surface densities. 

In this talk I will highlight the key results of the ALMA Large Program MAPS (Molecules with ALMA at Planet-forming Scales), that was designed to explore the radial and vertical chemical structures in 5 disks with high-angular resolution (7- 30 au). The five disks, IM Lup, GM Aur, AS 209, HD 163296 and MWC 480, present dust sub-structures and appear to have ongoing planet formation. We observed ~40 lines from 20 different molecular species, in 4 spectral settings in both band 6 and band 3. The first results of this program will be presented in a series of 20 papers that span a range of topics. All the data and a series of data products will be made available to the community so that this incredibly rich dataset can be used to continue exploring the chemistry that affects and probes planet formation. 

 

14/01/21 (Thursday)
11:00, Virtual talk | ESO Santiago
Joint ALMA/ESO Colloquia
Talk — Special Series: "ALMA Large Program Highlight Talks": ASPECS - The ALMA Spectroscopic Survey in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
Fabian Walter (Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany)

Abstract

 

I will report on some of the results emerging from the ALMA large program ASPECS (www.aspecs.info). ASPECS obtained deep imaging in the 1mm and 3mm bands of the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field (H-UDF) through frequency scans. The observations provide a full census of dust and molecular gas in the H-UDF, down to masses that are typical of main-sequence galaxies at redshifts 1-4. The resulting data products enable a great range of studies, from the characterisation of individual galaxies, capitalizing on the unique multi-wavelength dataset of the H-UDF, to CO excitation studies to constrain the gas properties of the distant galaxies. A 3D stacking analysis using precise redshifts from major VLT/MUSE initiatives on the field helped in recovering additional emission of galaxy samples that are too faint to be detected individually. Stacking in both the continuum and line (capitalizing on 100s of spectroscopic redshifts from major VLT/MUSE initiatives on the H-UDF) pushed the detection limits further. The nature of the observations (full spectral scans) provides a census of dust and molecular gas in the cosmic volume defined by the H-UDF. The resulting cosmic molecular gas density as a function of redshift shows an order of magnitude decrease from z=2 to z=0. This is markably different from independent measurements of the atomic gas phase that shows a rather flat redshift dependence. These measurements can be used to put new constraints on the gas accretion process that is needed to explain the build-up of stellar mass in galaxies through cosmic history.